Kale Khan, patriarch of a proud East Indian family living in Trinidad, believes his son's attempts to assimilate are a sign of weakness, and pins his hopes on Jamini, his grandson
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A new and exciting voice....
Exotic and baroque....
Moves with its own poetry
CARIBBEAN QUARTERLY
Ismith Khan was born in 1925 in Port of Spain, Trinidad, in a house that looked out on the famous Woodford Square where much of the action of The Jumbie bird takes place. Indeed this is where much of the drama of pre-independence politics in Trinidad was enacted through the years that Khan was growing up. His grandfather, Kale Khan, on whom the character in the novel is based, was Pathan, one of the fiercely independent, mountain-dwelling people whose ancestral homelands straddle what is now Pakistan and Afghanistan. The Pathans are renowned for their courage and military prowess: they resisted the British in India for generations and are presently involved in another colonial war, fighting the Russians in Afghanistan. They are a proud people with a strong sense of their own traditions and culture. Like the fictional character, the ‘real life’ Kale Khan was very conscious of his Pathan background and tried to instil the values of his culture to his only grandson. In a letter to the critic Arthur Drayton, Ismith Khan wrote of his grandfather that he
was ever involved in all things anti-British... his was a rebelliousness, his life was one of dissent, he ridiculed the Raj, chastised fellow Indians for being run over rough shod by the Sahibs.
Ismith Khan grew up then in a family dominated by this larger-than-life character who was something of a legend in the Indian community at that time.
Despite his Muslim background Ismith Khan was educated at Queens Royal College, one of Trinidad’s leading secondary schools, almost exclusively attended by children of the plantocracy and upper middle class. As Arthur Drayton comments,
It is not inconceivable that like Jamini, the young protagonist in The Jumbie Bird, he experienced there (at school), or knew others who did, the uncomfortable sense of not belonging socially and economically.
So far so much like the novel, but it is important to understand that The Jumbie Bird is fiction and that although many of the characters and several of the events of the story can be traced to people and incidents in Ismith Khan’s boyhood it would be a mistake to read The Jumbie Bird as simply an autobiographical account. For example, Ismith Khan points out that his own father, unlike Rahim in the novel, was a strong authoritative personality. What Ismith Khan has done is to use the scenes, characters, life style and language of a community he knows intimately to create an authentic location for his fiction. The Jumbie Bird utilises the perspective of a child growing to an understanding of his world to allow the reader insights into the nature and working of a particular community.
Ismith Khan worked as a reporter for the Trinidad Guardian for a time, before leaving Trinidad to study sociology and creative writing at American Universities. Ismith Khan lived in the USA, teaching and writing until his death in April 2002. He has published another novel, The Obeah Man (Hutchinson, London 1964) and several short stories as well as academic and critical work.
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Spese di spedizione:
EUR 7,16
Da: Barbados a: U.S.A.
Da: Black Rock Books, St Michael, Barbados
Soft cover. Condizione: Good. Inscribed on title page, 'Fond memories of Barbados on more than one Occasion. A good Rum hop. Next Time. TO ----- With love, admiration and respect. my our paths cross more often. Ismith Khan. Barbados, Nov 27 90." Edges browning, covers spotting, general wear. Codice articolo C03361
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